The Cult of Sol Invictus;
The Sun-Gods of Ancient Europe; Christian
worship of the Sun; Man and the Sun; Roman
festivals; Christmas;Astronomy; Lunar
and Solar Positions; Chronology (Calendars);
Epiphany and (more) Christmas; Clement
of Alexandria; Comments; The Legends of the
Saints; The Theodosian Code; Thomas
Paine

Theology and Feminism;
Struggle To Be the Sun Again; Women and
Religion in America; The End of Christendom
and the Future of Christianity; Encyclopedia
of Gods, Over 2,500 Deities of the World; The
Woman's Encyclopedia of Myths and Secrets; Aryan
Sun-Myths, The Origin of Religions; The Mothers,
A Study of the Origins of Sentiments and Institutions;
His Religion and Hers; Charlotte Perkins
Gilman: A Nonfiction Reader

Robert Taylor; The Formation
of the New Testament; The Canon of the New Testament;
Adolph Harnack History of Dogma; Apologetics;
New Testament Apocrypha; "Old Christian
Literature"; Ancient Christian Gospels;
Christian Convention, Nicaea, A.D. 325; Constantine;
The Freethought Exchange; Lies and Fiction
in the Ancient World

Orpheus A History of Religions; Zeus
A Study in Ancient Religion; Egyptians; Egypt;
Alexandria; Robert Taylor; Gnostics;
Forerunners and Rivals of Christianity; The
Wit of the Greeks and Romans; The Religions
of the Roman Empire; Greek and Roman Religion;
Winwood Reade; Scriptores Historiae Augustae;
disease; New Testament demonology; King James
the First; historical problems associated with the
Library(Libraries)at Alexandria; Marcus Tullius Cicero,and
Marcus Iunius Brutus; Celsus On the True Doctrine,
A Discourse Against the Christians

The Exact Sciences in
Antiquity;The First Stargazers;
The Birth of Astronomy; Stairways to the
Stars; Gods, Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia;
The Origin of all Religious Worship; Star
Names Their Lore and Meaning; The Dawn of Astronomy

Ancient Pagan and Modern Christian
Symbolism; The Migration of Symbols;
Sacred Symbols in Art; Sex Symbolism
in Religion; Life Symbols; A Dictionary
of Symbols; Gods, Demons and Symbols of Ancient
Mesopotamia

"....to break up and die, to return to Nature the elements
lent by her, that she may use them again according to her good pleasure.

It is thus, moreover, that all religions end, religions which,
like living organisms, are born of a need, nourished upon death, die day
by day of life, and finally lapse again into the eternal crucible."see page 359